Originally posted by tildearrow
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Benchmarking Ubuntu's Low-Latency Kernel & Liquorix Post-Meltdown
Collapse
X
-
As a new premium member ;-) ... Thank you very much Michael!
Leave a comment:
-
Typos:
Originally posted by phoronix View Postenables PRREMPT support, changes to 1000Hz tick from 250Hz, and enables LATENCYTOP support.
The Liquorix kenrel continues to be
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
Here's how one can achieve real smoothness:
- Use openSUSE Tumbleweed, since it contains the best Linux Kernel config by default. (250Hz tick timer, PREEMPT enabled)
- Use the deadline İO scheduler.
- Use the 'performance' governor.
- Additionally, if stuck on İntel, make sure to set the 'performance-bias' to '0'!
Now enjoy your silky-smooth Linux experience!
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
Benchmarking Ubuntu's Low-Latency Kernel & Liquorix Post-Meltdown
Phoronix: Benchmarking Ubuntu's Low-Latency Kernel & Liquorix Post-Meltdown
A new Phoronix Premium member was hypothesizing in the forums whether Ubuntu's low-latency kernel would be performing better in the wake of the Kernel Page Table Isolation (KPTI) support in the kernel for fending off the Meltdown CPU vulnerability. With always aiming to deliver on test requests by premium members, I ran some benchmarks of the Ubuntu low-latency vs. generic kernels and I also tossed in the Liquorix kernel for benchmarking too.
Tags: None
Leave a comment: